Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
CARIBBEAN CULT & POLITIC
Term session
0
Term
2016A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC116401
Meeting times
TR 1030AM-1200PM
Meeting location
UNIVERSITY MUSEUM 330
Instructors
THOMAS, DEBORAH
Description
This course offers anthropological perspectives on the Caribbean as a geo-political and socio-cultural region, and on contemporary Caribbean diaspora cultures. We will examine how the region's long and diverse colonial history has structured relationships between race, ethnicity, class, gender and power, as well as how people have challenged these structures. As a region in which there have been massive transplantation of peoples and their cultures from Africa, Asia, and Europe, and upon which the United States has exerted considerable influence, we will question the processes by which the meeting and mixing of peoples and cultures has occurred. Course readings include material on the political economy of slavery and the plantation system, family and community life, religious beliefs and practices, gender roles and ideologies, popular culture, and the differing ways national, ethnic, and racial identities are expressed on the islands and throughout the Caribbean diaspora.
Course number only
116
Cross listings
ANTH116401
LALS116401
Use local description
No